-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 >>>>> "e" == ean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
e> The alternative, apparently, will be some sort of external e> organization that deals with non-free. Inevitably we will have e> to come to terms with such an organization and draft policy for e> dealing with it's packages and inevitably other such e> organizations will start and we'll be stuck with a whole new e> mess of administrative headaches. That sucks. Why is that necessary? I agree that the demand seems to be there to bring together Debian add-on packages for non-free software, and I think when/if Debian drops non-free, some other individuals or organizations will pick up the slack. But I don't think Debian has any reason to "bless" any one such group, nor to make any special accommodations with that org. I don't see any advantage to users, nor to us. Technically we have a great package management system that makes it easy and convenient to track packages from any number of sources. Users can easily decide where they want to get their non-free packages, drop in a sources.list line, and then forget it. So, users who want non-free packages are covered. They plug into Debian easily. They don't get the rest of Debian infrastructure (QA, BTS, mirror network, developer community, yadda yadda), but that's the whole point of removing non-free. If there's a demand for it, someone will set up these things, too. ~ESP - -- Evan Prodromou [EMAIL PROTECTED] -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.2.4 (GNU/Linux) iD8DBQFAU0KyozwefHAKBVERAgJAAKCg3Wpjg87/OpDfHyQpZIMd5QxmrgCgxjHu 3Ih2HHw7vvCkZskn2MYBX3U= =SRHx -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----